(C) 2003 by the Lesbian & Gay Law Association Foundation of Greater New York.

DOMESTICALLY-PARTNERED DAD WINS CUSTODY APPEAL IN OREGON

The Court of Appeals of Oregon has awarded permanent custody of three minor children to their
biological father, who is living with a same-sex domestic partner, reversing the ruling of the
Circuit Court, which had granted custody to the children's paternal grandmother. _In re Strome_,
2003 WL 58528 (Jan 8). Based on intricate facts that led even the 5-4 majority to call this a
"close case," the court ruled that the children's grandmother failed to overcome the statutory and
constitutional presumption favoring legal (i.e., biological or adoptive) parents in custody disputes
between parents and non-parents.

Garth Strome and his former wife had three children, aged 5, 3 and 1 at the time of their
separation in 1995. While a petition to dissolve the couple's marriage was pending, the children
were living with their mother. When Strome learned that his former wife had exposed the
children to sexual and other abuse, Strome obtained temporary custody of the children, and moved
into his mother's home. Prior to obtaining temporary custody of the children, Strome led a self-destructive life, according to the court's opinion, which related that he was a heavy drinker and
drug user, prostituted himself for money and drugs, and talked about suicide. Even after he
obtained temporary custody of his children and moved back into his mother's home, his behavior
was evidently far from commendable. It was his own mother, with the help of Strome's two
sisters, who was primarily responsible financially and emotionally for the children's care. Strome
spent most days sleeping, and most nights using his computer. He had difficulty controlling his
anger in front of the children, often calling them vile names, and took little interest in their
schooling and general well being.

In 1997, things slowly began to turn around for Strome. He met Michael Chism, a truck driver
fifteen years his senior with two children of his own. After developing a relationship that
included regular visits to each other's home (sometimes with the children), Stome decided to
move in with Chism in 1999, bringing his three children with him. At the same time, Strome had an
epiphany that led him to stop yelling and swearing at his own children, and that improved his
relationship with his children in general. Strome's mother was less than pleased with the move.
The month after Strome and his children left, she obtained a temporary custody order. The police
took the children back to their grandmother without Strome's knowledge. Strome succeeded in
regaining custody several months later, and continued to have custody through the time of the
Circuit Court hearing in 2000.

During the 10 months preceding the hearing, Strome's parenting was deemed "exemplary."
According to the majority opinion by Justice Edmonds, "the uncontroverted evidence is that the
children thrived in their home" with Strome and Chism. Strome became actively involved in all
aspects of his children's lives, including education, extra-curricular activities, and home life. The
children testified that they enjoyed living with their father and wanted to stay with him. Although
Chism is an alcoholic, and even binged on one occasion after Strome and the children moved in,
he subsequently sought treatment in a rehabilitation program, and otherwise participated
meaningfully in the children's care.

Writing for the slim majority, Edmonds articulated the governing legal standard under Oregon
law and the United States Supreme Court's 2000 ruling in _Troxel v. Granville_, 530 U.S. 57.
Under _Troxel_, biological parents have a due process constitutional right to make decisions
concerning the care custody and control of their children that "supervenes" a best interest of the
child analysis in a custody dispute between a legal parent and non-parent. Therefore, in order to
prevail in this action, the majority and minority both agreed that Strome's mother had to prove
that Strome "cannot or will not provide adequate love and care or that the children will face an
undue risk of physical or psychological harm" in Strome's care. The majority and minority
disagreed about how to apply this legal standard to the facts of the case.

The majority and minority alike seemed to agree that if custody were to be determined based on
Strome's parenting and personal conduct from 1993 through 1999, his mother easily would have
met her burden of proof, and would have been entitled to custody of the children. All the judges
also seemed to agree that if custody were to be based solely on Strome's conduct during the ten
months preceding the Circuit Court hearing, he would be entitled to retain custody of his
children, since his parenting skills and his overall care of his children improved exponentially,
less than perfect as they still may have been. The difficulty presented, and the crux of the
difference between the majority and minority opinions, was best explained by Judge Edmonds in
a footnote, succinctly stated: "In the final analysis, it appears that we and the dissent disagree
about the weight to be given the evidence that father's parenting was exemplary for the ten-month period of time immediately before trial. That in itself may reflect a disagreement about
whether it is possible for father to change. We believe that it is possible."

The majority discounted an expert report that compared the parenting skills of Strome and his
mother, the relationship of the children with each, and their respective home environments.
Although the expert concluded that Strome's mother would be the better and more stable parent
for the children, the majority ruled that the comparison was legally inappropriate. According to
Edmonds, the report was more akin to a "best interests of the child" assessment that should have
been reserved for custody disputes between two parents, rather than an assessment between a
parent and a non-parent. The appropriate assessment, and one that was presented by a second
expert and adopted by the court, focused on Strome only, and determined that Strome did not
pose an undue risk to his children.

In a particularly lengthy dissent, Chief Justice Deits took the position that Strome's past
parenting would be the best indication of his future parenting, and that Strome ultimately posed
an undue risk of psychological harm to the children that warranted custody being with Strome's
mother. "We are obligated to make a determination about father's future performance as a parent
and the future risk that the children will face in his custody. That determination must include not
only father's most recent performance as a parent but also father's long-term history as a parent."

Perhaps the most striking aspect of both the majority and minority opinions is that neither placed
any emphasis whatsoever on the fact that Strome was in a relationship and living with another
man. None of the opinions referred to Strome as "gay" or "homosexual" or "bisexual" or made
anything of his sexual orientation. Both opinions also stressed that Strome's children were doing
well in their new home headed by a same-sex couple.

Belgium has become the world's second country to open up the institution of marriage to same-sex couples. By a 91-22 vote with nine abstentions on Jan. 30, the nation's House of
Representatives approved a measure already passed in the Senate amending the marriage law to
this effect. However, unlike the Netherlands, the first country to embrace same-sex marriage, the
Belgians are not ready to allow same-sex partners to adopt children, although single gay people
may adopt in Belgium. Also, the Belgian law is restricted to Belgian nationals, with the
exception that Belgium will also perform same-sex marriages between persons whose own
nations allow such marriages. Thus, a Belgian/Dutch couple could marry in either country.
Belgium had previously passed laws allowing registration for same-sex partners accompanied by
some legal rights, but the new measure introduces complete equality with opposite-sex couples,
with the exceptions noted. It is likely that contiguity with the Netherlands had something to do
with this outcome, especially given the free interchange of people between the two countries
under the banner of the European Union. In reporting on this development, the Associated Press
noted that in the Netherlands, where same-sex couples may adopt children, it is estimated that
one in every 13 same-sex couples have done so. _Associated Press_, Jan. 30; _GayLive_
(Belgium), Jan. 30; _Algemeen Dagblad_ (Netherlands), Jan. 30. A.S.L.

LESBIAN/GAY LEGAL NEWS

9/11 Fund Special Master Awards Benefits to Surviving Lesbian Partner

In what may be an unprecedented step under federal law, Special Master Kenneth Feinberg, who
is administering the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund established by the federal
government, has awarded $557,390 in benefits to Peggy Neff, the surviving domestic partner of
Sheila Hein, a civilian Army employee who died during the terrorist attack on the Pentagon on
that date. Feinberg's award was made last fall, but first revealed by Lambda Legal Defense,
which is representing Neff, late in January.

Feinberg had taken the position that because the Fund was established in order to award benefits
that could be the subject of wrongful death suits against the airlines and airport security
operations, only claimants who would have been able to bring such suits would be entitled to
claim benefits. Neff and Hein had made wills, under which Neff was the executor and principal
heir of Hein's estate. In addition, Hein's surviving legal relatives - her mother and sister - did
not make any claim for compensation and supported Neff's claim.

In awarding benefits, Feinberg treated Neff is equivalent to a surviving spouse in awarding the
portion of the benefits intended to compensate for loss of future earnings. Neff's status as
principal heir and executor clearly made her eligible for the portion of the award identified as
compensation for the pain and suffering incurred by the deceased. However, Feinberg did not
award Neff the portion of benefits that would normally be provided to surviving spouses and
children for their emotional loss. In effect, he compromised the claim, but went further than one
might have expected, especially in light of the general federal policy against any recognition of
same-sex partners (embodied, inter alia, in the federal Defense of Marriage Act).

Several other claims are still pending before Feinberg from surviving same-sex partners, some of
whom do not have the level of documentation and estate planning that was present in the case of
Neff and Hein. _Gay City News_, Jan. 24. A.S.L.

A "management test" required for all persons seeking management positions at Rent-a-Center,
Inc. inquired about sexual preferences and orientation, religious beliefs and practices, and
medical conditions. A federal magistrate ruled that the plaintiffs, a class consisting of current and
former employees of Rent-a-Center, Inc., could not include causes of action under the Americans
with Disabilities Act, state privacy law, or certain Illinois statutes, in a suit against the employer
and the company that devised the test. Allowance of the state claims in federal court hinges on
the permissibility of a federal ADA claim. The district court reversed the magistrate's decision
and allowed the ADA claim, a limited privacy action, and certain of the causes under state
statute. _Karraker v. Rent-a-Center, Inc._, 2003 WL 57363 (C.D. Ill. Jan. 8, 2003).

The magistrate's report had denied the plaintiffs' motion to add an ADA claim to their
complaint. The plaintiffs alleged that the defendants violated the ADA's restrictions on medical
examinations and inquiries for job applicants. The plaintiffs, according to the magistrate, must be
qualified _individuals with disabilities_ in order raise a claim under the ADA. However, the
plaintiffs alleged that one need not have a disability to be "qualified" to bring an action
challenging a practice forbidden by the Act.

The ADA prohibits discrimination against "a qualified individual with a disability . . . in regard
to job application procedures, the hiring, advancement, or discharge of employees, employee
compensation, job training, and other terms, conditions and privileges of employment." 42
U.S.C. § 12112(a). "The prohibition against discrimination . . . shall include medical
examinations and inquiries." 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(1). An employer may only ask applicants
about their ability to perform job-related functions. After an offer of employment is extended, the
employer may condition the offer on the results of a medical examination, so long as all entering
employees are subject to such exams and the results are maintained as confidential and not used
for unlawful discriminatory purposes. After employment has commenced, the employer may not
inquire whether the employee has a disability unless the query is job-related or a business
necessity. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(2) to (4).

The ADA issue in this case is whether an individual must be a "qualified individual with a
disability" in order to bring a claim that an employer made improper or unauthorized medical
inquires. Although the Seventh Circuit, where Illinois lies, had not ruled on the issue, the Eighth,
Ninth and Tenth Circuits had held that the plaintiff need not be disabled in order to claim a
violation of these provisions. Unlike other sections of the ADA, which refer to "qualified
individuals with a disability," section 12112(d) refers to "job applicants" and "employees,"
without reference to disability. Protecting only qualified individuals would defeat the usefulness
of this section of the law, held the court, citing to _Fredenburg v. Contra Costa County Dep't of
Health Servs._, 172 F.3d 1176 (9th Cir. 1999). Congress intended that the employer curtail all
questioning that would identify persons with disabilities. It makes no sense to require an
employee to prove that he or she has a disability to prevent the employer from inquiring whether
he or she has a disability.

One district court had held that only persons with disabilities could raise claims under this
section, in _Varnagis v. City of Chicago_, 1997 WL 361150 (N.D. Ill. June 20, 1997). However,
the court in the present case held that the plaintiffs need not be "qualified individuals with
disabilities" in order to state a claim. Therefore, the ADA claim is admissible.

Because a federal claim is cognizable, a federal court may exercise its supplemental jurisdiction
to hear state law claims. Specific to Illinois, claims under the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act
(administering the exam is an unlicensed practice of psychology) and the Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act (revelation of test results violates the act) were
allowed to proceed.

Of more general interest is the court's holding on issues involving invasion of privacy. The court
reviewed the four genres of invasion of privacy: (1) intrusion upon the seclusion of another, (2)
appropriation of the name or likeness of another, (3) publicity given to a private life, and (4)
publicity placing a person in a false light. Of those four, the plaintiffs only raised sufficient
allegations to make a claim under number 3, publicity given to a private life. The elements of the
claim are: (a) publicity is given to the disclosure of private facts; (b) the facts are private and not
public facts; and (c) the matter made public would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.
_Wynne v. Loyola Univ._, 741 N.E.2d 669 (Ill. App. 2000). The plaintiffs met these elements.

The court also decided issues of personal jurisdiction, dismissing one individual defendant but
leaving the two companies as properly within the jurisdiction of an Illinois state court. _Alan J.
Jacobs_

Lesbian Palimony Claim Rejected by California Appeals Court

A unanimous panel has approved a trial court ruling that a lesbian couple did not have an implied
contract governing their property, in an unpublished decision, _Robertson v. Reinhart_, 2003 WL
122613 (Cal. Ct. App., 1st Dist., Jan. 8). The unanimous decision upheld the denial of a claim by
Lynn Robertson that she was entitled to a share of the assets of Leal Reinhart, who was her
domestic partner for six years.

Robertson and Reinhart began dating in 1993. Robertson moved in with Reinhart the next year,
and they lived together until 1999. Reinhart, a sporting-goods sales representative who owned
her own home in Albany, California and had a portfolio of investments, was older than
Robertson, a real estate agent who had never gone to college. Reinhart encouraged her to go to
college, and gave $20,000 to Robertson to assist with college expenses.

The women maintained separate bank accounts throughout their relationship, never opening any
joint accounts, and both the Albany house and a vacation house that Reinhart bought remained
solely in Reinhart's name. Robertson contributed hundreds of hours of work when both houses
were being renovated, although the bulk of the work was done by building contractors. Except
for the time when she was going to school, Robertson paid rent to Reinhart, and paid for her
share of the phone bills and other expenses.

It was Reinhart who ended the relationship. Robertson sued, claiming that as they had lived as
domestic partners for six years, the court should find an implied contract by which assets
acquired during the relationship should be shared upon its dissolution. But the Alameda County
Superior Court was unwilling to find such an implied contract.

The California courts were pioneers in establishing a legal theory of implied contracts between
cohabitants. The key decision is _Marvin v. Marvin_, 18 Cal. 3d 660 (1976), which involved
movie actor Lee Marvin and his live-in female partner, Michelle Triola. The two had held
themselves out as being married, but never formally got married, since Marvin had never
divorced his wife, from whom he was separated. However, in the lawsuit stemming from the
breakup of their relationship, Triola claimed that they had an understanding that property
acquired was to be treated in the same way that California law treats property acquired by a
married couple. Most legal precedents at that time held that such an agreement would be
unenforceable as a matter of public policy, but the California Supreme Court ruled that there was
no reason why unmarried partners who were living together in a sexual relationship could not
make a contract about their property, so long as sexual services was not the consideration for the
contract. (That would make it an illegal prostitution contract.)

In this case, Lynn Robertson was trying to use _Marvin_ to get a property settlement from Leal
Reinhart, but the courts were not willing to play along, finding that the women's situation was
very distinguishable from _Marvin_. Most particularly, there was no merger of finances when
they were living together, and no overt expression of agreement that they were going to treat their
property the way a married couple would. From the evidence presented at trial, it appeared that
Reinhart had been careful to maintain a separation of finances, and had actually made all her
financial decisions pretty much independently of Robertson. Under these circumstances, the
court was unwilling to find an implied-in-fact contract between the two women.

Robertson had also made an alternative argument, using _quantum meruit._ Pointing to the
hundreds of hours of work she put in on the renovation of Reinhart's property, Robertson argued
that she should be paid for the value of her contribution. Her argument was unsuccessful,
however, the court finding that there is a presumption that parties living together in an
emotionally interdependent relationship do things for each other without any expectation of
payment. Quantum meruit applies to situations where somebody confers a benefit on somebody
else under circumstances where fairness and justice call out for payment to avoid "unjust
enrichment" of the recipient of the benefit. In the absence of an express or implied contract for
Robertson to be paid for her work, the court found no evidence that she ever expected to be paid
or that it would be unjust to treat her work as a gift she had conferred on her partner.

Finally, the court rejected Robertson's contention that the trial judge was biased against her
because she is a lesbian. The court of appeals found this argument difficult to fathom, inasmuch
as Reinhart is also a lesbian. The court observed that when Robertson's trial attorney submitted a
proposed statement of decision to the trial judge, it stated that "plaintiff's counsel is aware that
the Court in this case is not homophobic." "Moreover," wrote Judge Gemello for the appellate
panel, "Robertson does not offer evidence that the trial court was biased against her and biased in
favor of Reinhart, also a lesbian."

The decision does not in any way cut back on the availability of the _Marvin_ precedent for
same-sex couples, but makes quite clear that an implied contract cannot be based solely on the
fact that a couple has been living together. In order to find an implied contract, the court must
find evidence based on their behavior and statements that they actually had some sort of
agreement or understanding concerning the way their property was to be treated. In this case, the
court found substantial evidence on the trial record to support the conclusion that these women
had not such agreement. A.S.L.

Transgendered Teen In Foster Care Facility May Dress as She Desires

In an important ruling suggesting that transgendered persons may be protected from
discrimination by the New York State Human Rights Law, even though an amendment to
provide express protection failed in the state Senate in December when the Sexual Orientation
Non-Discrimination Act was being debated, a state Supreme Court Justice, Louise Gruner Gans,
ruled that a "Jean Doe" plaintiff who is a 17-year old biological male is entitled to dress as a girl
while living in a New York City foster care facility for boys. _Matter of Jean Doe v. Bell_,
NYLJ, 1/16/2003, p. 21, col. 4 (N.Y. Supreme Ct., N.Y. Co.).

Doe has been diagnosed by two competent medical professionals as having Gender Identity
Disorder, a condition recognized in DSM-IV, the official manual of mental disorders published
by the American Psychiatric Association. Although born male, she identifies and desires to dress
as female. She has been in foster care since age 9. When this identity issue asserted itself, she
was assigned to a foster care setting for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered youth, in which
she could dress as she desired without running afoul of any house rules, but she was discharged
from two such foster care settings for misconduct, and was assigned to the all-boys Atlantic
Transitional Foster Facility administered by New York City's Administration for Children's
Services (ACS). In this facility, the administration required that she dress as a boy, enforcing a
prohibition on any resident of the facility wearing dresses or skirts. ACS rejected all attempts by
Doe to appeal this policy in her case, contending that because she had misbehaved in those
settings where her manner of dress would be tolerated, she could not be heard to complain about
the restrictions in the all-boys facility to which she was consigned for the duration of her
minority.

Justice Gans found that Gender Identity Disorder easily qualifies as a disability under the broad
definition of that concept in the Human Rights Law, Exec. L. Sec. 292(21). Justice Gans rejected
Doe's argument that the Atlantic Transitional Center's no-dress rule is a direct violation of the
statute, finding that it is neutral on its face and was not shown to have been adopted specifically
to discriminate on the basis of gender identity. However, the court found that because Gender
Identity Disorder is a disability, the Center had a duty of reasonable accommodation, and that
allowing Doe to wear addresses could be such an accommodation.

The defendants' arguments against the duty of reasonable accommodation were three. First, they
claimed they had no duty because they did not know that Doe had a disability. Justice Gans
found this incredible, noting that the ACS was aware of the diagnoses that had been made.
Second, ACS argued that it had already made reasonable accommodations by allowing Doe to
wear blouses, make-up and augmented breasts, and that allowing any more pronounced feminine
dress by Doe would endanger the safety of the facility, since some of the less mature or mentally
stable boys housed there would engage in inappropriate and possibly dangerous behavior if
provoked by the sight of another boy wearing a dress. Justice Gans found this argument
unpersuasive as well, noting that Doe has been allowed to wear the blouses and make-up without
evidence of disruptive or unsafe conditions at the facility.

Finally, Justice Gans rejected the argument that ACS's duty was satisfied when it sent Doe to the
gay-friendly facilities where her cross-dressing was tolerated, and that it was Doe's fault if her
misbehavior made it impossible for her to live in such facilities. According to Gans, a provide of
residential housing has a duty not to discriminate and to accommodate persons with disabilities at
all its facilities, not just designated facilities. "That Doe engaged in misconduct that led to her
expulsion from the foster care facilities designed for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered
youth gives ACS no license to discriminate against her by denying her a reasonable
accommodation. A.S.L.

NY Domestic Partners Pursue Transit Authority Benefits

On January 2, the _New York Law Journal_ published New York County Supreme Court Justice
Robert Lippman's preliminary rulings allowing suit against the New York City Transit Authority
(TA) and Transport Workers Union (TWU) by an employee seeking health benefits coverage for
his domestic partner. _Reilly v. Transport Workers Union_.

James Reilly and George Brennan were issued a Certificate of Domestic Partnership by the City
of New York in 1999. In 2001, Reilly, a TA employee and TWU member, applied to have
Brennan covered by his employee health benefits. The TWU - TA - MABSTOA Health Benefit
Trust denied the application, on the ground that the Trustees had not authorized the provision of
benefits for domestic partners. Reilly and Brennan brought suit against the TWU, the TA, the
Trustees appointed by those organizations, and the Administrators of the Trust, alleging that the
refusal to authorize such benefits violates the TA's internal Equal Employment Opportunity
(EEO) policy, as well as sections of the NYC Administrative Code including the NYC Human
Rights Law (NYCHRL) and the city's Domestic Partnership Ordinance.

The complaint seeks a judgement declaring that defendants are in violation of the Code and the
NYCHRL, an injunction restraining defendants from further discriminatory acts, an order
compelling them to authorize benefits for Brennan, appointment of a monitor to eradicate
discriminatory practices by the Trustees, and attorneys fees and costs. Plaintiffs also moved for
such relief, which the opinion treats as a motion for summary judgement. The TA, TA Trustees,
and Administrators cross-moved for dismissal, contending that the TA is exempt from the
provisions of the NYCHRL, that the NYCHRL does not require employers to provide benefits to
employees' domestic partners, that the TA Trustees and Administrators cannot be held liable, and
that the TA's nondiscrimination policy does not enhance plaintiffs' rights. The TWU and TWU
Trustees, represented by separate counsel, contend that they are not appropriate parties to this
action.

NYC Administrative Code s3-244(f) extends health benefits to registered domestic partners of
City employees. Plaintiffs, noting that the TA is largely funded by, and all of its operations take
place within, the City of New York, asked the court to "deem TA employees quasi-city
employees entitled to" the same benefits. While "sympathetic to the challenges faced by
nontraditional families," the court found that the TA is a public benefit corporation and can be
considered neither a city agency nor a city contractor. Nor, at present, does State law require such
public authorities to provide benefits to employees' partners.

The court then rejected defendants' contention that the TA is exempt from the NYCHRL. On its
face, Public Authorities Law s1266(8) exempts the TA from municipal law. The court, however,
cited federal and state decisions establishing that the TA is only exempt from local laws which
interfere with the accomplishment of its purpose, and that compliance with local human rights
laws will not interfere with the TA's purpose. The court also found that Reilly and Brennan's
pleadings sufficiently state a disparate impact claim of discrimination prohibited under the
NYCHRL. Plaintiffs concede that the TA policy is facially neutral. To establish disparate
impact, plaintiffs must demonstrate that gay and lesbian employees are disproportionately
burdened by the TA practice of denying health benefits to domestic partners, by "requisite
statistical" evidence per the opinion.

Defendants' concern, that the TA's EEO policy as set forth in 1997 and 2002 letters from the TA
President, not be held to enhance plaintiffs' rights, appeared misplaced. While it is unclear
whether Reilly ever filed an administrative EEO complaint, the court focused on the facts that
plaintiffs apparently neither assert breach of contract claims based on the policy, nor do they seek
monetary damages or any remedies beyond those grounded in their NYCHRL disparate impact
claim.

At the stage of deciding the various cross-motions, the court declined to delve deeply into
contentions that the defendants were not "appropriate" parties, or that they could not be held
liable for unlawful discrimination in violation of the Administrative Code. The court reasoned
that the defendants were necessary parties as contemplated by the CPLR, and, particularly where
a declaratory judgement was sought, due process required their presence. _Mark Major_

Civil Litigation Notes

_California_ - In a decision that seems to have drawn more notice in the foreign press than in the
United States, movie actor Tom Cruise won a $10 million settlement of his defamation action
against Chad Slater, a man who makes gay wrestling and sex movies under the pseudonym of
Kyle Bradford. Cruise had originally sued Slater for $100 million in Los Angeles Superior Court
after Slater told a French magazine that he had been in a sexual relationship with Cruise. Slater
defaulted on the law suit, stating that he would file for bankruptcy if Cruise continued the suit,
according to a report by Agence France-Press that appeared in Canada in the _National Post_ on
January 16. Cruise announced that any money he receives from Slater in fulfilment of the
judgment will be donated to charity. Cruise had previously sued Michael Davis, who had
claimed that he had a videotape depicting Cruise engaged in homosexual sex, but the suit was
dropped when Davis recanted his story and admitted he did not have such a tape.

_California_ -- Most same-sex harassment cases brought under Title VII involve allegations that
male supervisors or co-workers are harassing male employees. _Smith v. County of Humboldt_,
2003 WL 147769 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 15, 2003), provides the unusual circumstances of a same-sex
harassment case involving women. Mary Smith claimed that a co-worker, Denise Grimes, had
created such a hostile environment for her through unwanted sexual harassment during their
probationary training period that Smith had been forced to quit. The court determined that
Smith's allegations fell short of the rather high standard the courts have erected in determining
whether particular co-employee conduct has created such a hostile environment that Title VII's
ban on sex discrimination has been violated. District Judge Illston explained that Smith had
failed to present evidence tending to show that the conduct she found objectionable was
motivated by her sex; she asserted her belief that Grimes was a lesbian, but there was no other
evidence presented other than Smith's deposition testimony that Grimes "wore her hair in a way
that could have been considered a lesbian-type hairstyle and exhibited actions that I took to be of
a homosexual nature." Wrote Illston: "these bald assertions, which are supported by nothing
more than Ms. Smith's speculation about lesbian fashion, are insufficient to establish that Ms.
Grimes was a lesbian or that her actions toward Ms. Smith were motivated by sexual desire."
Indeed, Grimes filed a declaration under oath stating that she "is not homosexual and was not
attracted to Ms. Smith." Illston also found that Smith's allegations did not show severe or
pervasive conduct sufficient to create an actionable claim, and that the employer's reaction to
Smith's complaints -- changing the location of the two women's assigned work stations to
alleviate the alleged problem -- was sufficient under the circumstances to shield the county from
liability.

_Kentucky & Texas_ - On Jan. 22, the ACLU Lesbian and Gay Rights Project filed lawsuits in
federal courts in Kentucky and Texas challenging the actions of public school officials blocking
students from forming gay/straight alliances at their schools. The lawsuits invoke the Equal
Access Act, a federal statute that forbids schools that receive federal financial assistance from
discriminatory content-based treatment of student clubs, and the First Amendment right of free
speech and association. (Litigation at the college and university level has firmly established that
refusal of public universities to allow gay student groups to meet on campus violates the First
Amendment.) In Kentucky, the Boyd County Board of Education actually voted to suspend all
students clubs in an effort to bar a group of students from establishing a gay/straight alliance at
the high school. In Klein, an affluent suburb of Houston, Texas, students have twice submitted
applications to form a gay/straight alliance at Klein High School, and authorities have refused to
respond to the applications.

_Massachusetts_ - In a last-ditch effort to get their anti-marriage state constitutional amendment
before the voters, proponents sued Thomas Birmingham, President of the Commonwealth
Senate, who had successfully maneuvered last summer to keep the measure off the ballot, even
though it had enough signatures to require the legislature to consider it, by calling the meeting for
that purpose and then adjourning it before a vote could be taken. If the legislature did not
reconvene to consider the measure before the end of December, it was dead, and the plaintiffs in
_Pawlick v. Birmingham_, 780 N.E. 2d 466, 438 Mass. 1010 (Dec. 30, 2002), were determined
to keep their effort alive. But a single justice of the court rejected their suit, and on December 30
the Supreme Judicial Court unanimously confirmed the action of the single justice, finding that
Birmingham could not be sued to compel him to reconvene the legislature. Under Massachusetts
law, in order to get the measure on the general ballot, the proponents would need a positive vote
from at least 20 percent of the state legislators, and they seemed likely to get that many votes if it
were to come to a vote. _Associated Press_, Dec. 30.

_Michigan_ -- In the continuing saga of Linda Mack's suit against the city of Detroit for
employment discrimination on the basis of sex and sexual orientation, the Michigan Court of
Appeals ruled, on remand from the state's Supreme Court, that the city of Detroit did not have
legislative authority to create a charter provision on discrimination providing a cause of action
against the city by its employees. _Mack v. City of Detroit_, 2002 WL 31874853 (Dec. 20,
2002). The main holding of the Supreme Court in the prior case was similarly that the city's
charter provision forbidding sexual orientation discrimination could not afford a cause of action
against the city by its employees, on grounds of state law preemption and sovereign immunity.

_Minnesota_ -- In _SOB, Inc. v. County of Benton_, 2003 WL 162825 (Jan. 24, 2003), the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit upheld a decision by the U.S. District Court in Minnesota
rejecting a 1st Amendment challenge to a county ordinance that was apparently enacted in
response to the opening of an alcohol-free cabaret club that presented nude dancers. The
ordinance generally prohibited "public indecency," which was defined to include any situation
where a person "knowingly or intentionally in a public setting or place appears in a state of
nudity." Upon this enactment, the dancers at plaintiff's establishment had to cover their breasts
and genitals with pasties and g-strings, and the owner brought suit to get the ordinance declared
unconstitutional. As the 8th Circuit found in attempting to write a decision, the state of the law in
this area is not exactly clear and well-organized, but the court ultimately concluded that under
existing Supreme Court precedent the ordinance was lawful, inasmuch as the local law
enforcement officials disavowed any attempt to arrest people for legitimate theater performances
that might include incidental nudity. Perhaps the case was simplified because the evidence
showed that this rural county did not have any establishments presenting serious live theater
productions The trial judge had agreed to issue an injunction against anybody being arrested for
violation of the ordinance, but this was quashed by the Appeals Court upon its finding that the
ordinance was constitutional.

_Missouri_ -- In a case arising from Missouri, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit ruled
that a transsexual's failure to request leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act waived her
subsequent right to sue under that statute. _Sanders v. May Department Stores Company_, 2003
WL 61112 (Jan. 9, 2003). According to the facts recited in Circuit Judge Smith's opinion,
Sanders, born male, began working for Mays as a financial analyst in 1984. In March 1998,
Sanders notified May that she suffered from gender dysphoria and was planning to have gender
reassignment surgery in a few months. She planned to quit her job, since she was expecting to
relocate to another state after the surgery. There were communications between Sanders and
May about the manner of her leaving, during which May suggested to Sanders that she might
qualify for leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act, but she declined to apply for such
leave because she did not want to provide the required documentation to establish that her
condition fell within the range of eligible conditions for such coverage. However, subsequent to
her surgery, her plans changed and she sought her old job back. Mays had filled the position by
then, but later offered her another job, which she accepted. However, she did not work out to
May's satisfaction in that job and was fired. she sued in federal court claiming a violation of the
FMLA, under which an employee who takes medical leave is entitled to reinstatement. The
district court and the 8th Circuit panel accepted May's argument that since this was not an FMLA
leave, as Sanders had declined to apply for such, the FMLA reinstatement requirements did not
apply to her case.

_New York_ - William Downey, a retired businessman who is a former student at the Seminary
of the Immaculate Conception in Huntington, N.Y., has filed a lawsuit against the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, Long Island, N.Y., who claims that he was wrongfully
expelled from the Seminary after he threatened to publicize his complaints that the seminary was
a hotbed of pro-gay teachings, contrary to the tenets of the Roman Catholic faith. He charges
that professors distributed "lewd and pro-homosexual materials," including a pamphlet
advertising books that affirmed gay and lesbian Christians. " For our seminary to teach notions
that run contrary to authentic Catholic theology, in fact to teach a condemned heresy that permits
one who molests children to sleep at night, has created the conditions under which the sex
scandal is a natural byproduct," charged Downey at a press conference in his lawyer's office after
the filing of the suit in New York Supreme Court in Mineola. Downey is seeking $2 million in
damages on claims of fraud and breach of contract. _Newsday_, Jan. 21.

_Pennsylvania - Pittsburgh_ - An ongoing lawsuit concerning domestic partnership benefits at
the University of Pittsburgh has again turned nasty, according to a Jan. 24 report in the school's
student newspaper, _Pitt News_, which states that the school administration has now asked the
court to rule that the city's equal rights ordinance invalid, as a violation of the Pennsylvania
Home Rule Act and Human Relations Act. At a previous stage, the parties had agreed to take the
litigation off the active docket while the University appointed a committee to study the issue of
domestic partner benefits and make a report to the administration. The committee issued its
report, which concluded that "to move unilaterally to offer domestic partner health insurance
benefits now would not be prudent." Issuance of the report drew sharp criticism from the
plaintiffs, one lawyer calling the committee process "a complete and utter failure." Expecting the
litigation to heat up again, the University apparently moved preemptively to file a motion for a
permanent injunction, claiming that the city of Pittsburgh lacks legislative authority to enact a
ban on sexual orientation discrimination.

_Texas_ - Let it never be said that Texas (or any other U.S. jurisdiction, for that matter) has
adopted user-friendly procedures for prisoners who have legal complaints about their treatment
behind bars. In _Crain v. Prasifka_, 2003 WL 194709 (Tex. App. - Corpus Christi, Jan. 30), a
gay prisoner in the McConnell Unit in Bee County who began serving his sentence there on
September 25, 2000, repeatedly requested that he be placed in a protective custody status out of
fear that he would be assaulted in the general prisoner population. His request was denied and,
he alleges, he was housed together with an inmate who had a history of sexual misconduct and
assault. Predictably, Crain was repeatedly sexually assaulted by his cellmate over a period of
several days, during which Crain sent a letter to the warden about the assaults, in which he
alleged that prison officials were guilty of deliberate indifference to his wellbeing. Finally,
Crain was taken to the infirmary and moved to another cell. He filed a formal step 1 grievance.
He received a written response about a month later, indicating that due to the nature of his
grievance, a copy of his grievance was being sent to "the Administrator of Offender Grievance
Program at Internal Affairs Division." On the back of the form, in fine print, was a statement that
if he was dissatisfied with the step 1 response, he could submit a step 2 grievance. Crain,
assuming that forwarding of his grievance was all he had to do, never formally filed a step 2
grievance. Big mistake When Crain ultimately attempted to sue the prison officials, his
complaint was dismissed with prejudice by the Bee County District Court, on the ground that he
had failed to file a step 2 grievance. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed, except for the
"with prejudice," noting that a dismissal for failure to exhaust internal prison remedies is not a
decision on the merits of the complaint. A.S.L.

Criminal Litigation Notes

_California_ - Riverside County Superior Court Judge Patrick Magers stirred up criticism from
gay rights activists when he dismissed a hate-crime allegation against David Leal Martinez and
Dorian Lee Gutierrez, charged in the murder of Jeffery Owens. Prosecutors had argued that
Owens was targeted by members of a Hispanic gang because he was gay, but Judge Magers
found based on the evidence up to this point in the case that the fight in which Owens died had
nothing to do with his sexual orientation. He said on Jan. 21 that the assault was "more of a
mutual combat situation" and that evidence of an anti-gay motivation was lacking from the
prosecution's initial case. _Riverside Press-Enterprise_, Jan. 23.

_Georgia_ - Following the precedent of its 1998 decision holding the state sodomy law to be an
unconstitutional violation of privacy rights, the Georgia Supreme Court ruled on Jan. 13 that the
state's fornication law was similarly unconstitutional. The unanimous decision in _In re J.M._,
2003 WL 79330, reversed the delinquency adjudication of 16-year-old J.M., who was found to
have unlawfully had consensual sex with his 16-year-old girlfriend in her bedroom. The juvenile
court adjudicated him a delinquent based on his violation of the fornication law, OCGA sec. 16-6-18. Age 16 is the age of consent for lawful sex in Georgia, but the right to engage in
heterosexual intercourse was limited to married couples due to the fornication law. (Ironically,
homosexuals could legally have sex in Georgia because of the 1998 decision, but their unmarried
heterosexual counterparts could not. Even more ironic is that the 1998 decision involved a
heterosexual couple appealing a sodomy law conviction.) Chief Justice Fletcher's opinion for
the court rejected the state's patently ridiculous argument that the privacy of the home did not
apply to fornication because only one of the fornicators was in his or her home. The court then
rejected all the justifications the state advanced for this invasion of privacy, finding none of them
applicable.

_Kansas_ - The _Kansas City Star_ reported on Jan. 23 that the Kansas Court of Appeals had
rejected an appeal of a sodomy conviction in an unpublished decision filed on December 6 in
_State of Kansas v. Rowe_, which is listed in a table of cases published at 59 P.3d 1061. Robert
T. Rowe was arrested together with his sexual partner, another man, in the Shawnee Mission
Park restroom, and charged with criminal sodomy. Kansas is one of the handful of states which
still maintains a sodomy law applicable only to same-sex conduct. Rowe and his partner were
engaged in oral sex when apprehended by a police officer. A Johnson County District Judge
sentenced him to 120 days in jail and he appealed. The court of appeals rejected his argument
that the statute unconstitutionally discriminates on the basis of sexual orientation, finding that
only rationality review would apply to such a claim and that the state had a rational basis,
founded in public health, in attempting to deter oral sodomy between same-sex partners. A
concurring judge opined that the case might have presented more of a challenge had Rowe
premised his argument on sex discrimination rather than sexual orientation discrimination,
according to the newspaper account.

_Michigan_ -- The Michigan Court of Appeals has affirmed prison sentences for Darryl L.
McFall and Terrance K. Christian, who were tried together on charges of assaulting, robbing and
carjacking a gay man. _People v. Christian_, 2003 WL 178293 (Mich. App., Jan. 24, 2003);
_People v. McFall_, 2003 WL 178807 (Mich. App., Jan. 24, 2003) (both unpublished). It
appears that Christian was the main actor, having been convicted of assault with intent to do
great bodily harm less than murder, unarmed robbery, and carjacking, while McFall was
convicted of unarmed robbery, the evidence being that he was mainly aiding and abetting
Christian. One of the grounds on which both men sought to appeal their convictions was that the
prosecutor, having elicited testimony from the victim about his sexual orientation, then
apparently sought to depict the incident as a hate crime when, in fact, there was no evidence
during the trial that either of the defendants knew that the victim was gay. In both appeals, the
court agreed with the defendants that there was no evidence concerning their knowledge of the
victim's sexual orientation, but observed: "However, viewed in context of the complete closing
argument, the prosecutor's remark did not affect defendant's substantive rights. The prosecutor's
comment occurred during a lengthy discussion of the evidence, was isolated, and was not so
inflammatory that defendant was prejudiced. Moreover, the trial court instructed the jury that the
lawyers' comments were not evidence and that the jury should not be influenced by sympathy or
prejudice. The instructions were sufficient to cure any prejudice."

_Texas_ - The U.S. Supreme Court announced that oral argument on the Texas sodomy law
challenge, Lawrence v. Texas, will be held March 26. Our prior report on the grant of certiorari,
echoing press releases from gay rights groups, brought some comments from readers pointing out
that the national situation concerning the continuing existence of sodomy laws was rather more
complicated than we had presented. Although trial level courts have pronounced against the
constitutionality of sodomy laws in Michigan and Puerto Rico, those laws are still officially in
effect. In addition, several states with sodomy laws that do not distinguish based on the gender
of the participants nonetheless exempt married heterosexual couples from prosecution, either by
statute or court decision. All of this arcane learning might be rendered interesting history,
though, depending on how the Supreme Court rules in the Texas case. * * * Lambda Legal
Defense, which is litigating the _Lawrence_ case, has been holding a series of town meetings
around the country to bring forth individual testimony about the impact of sodomy laws on the
laws of individuals - even those who are not necessarily prosecuted directly under those laws.
A.S.L.

Legislative Notes

_California_ - The Modesto Board of Education voted 4-3 on Jan. 13 to extend to teachers,
administrators and support staff the opportunity to purchase medical, dental, vision, cancer or life
insurance for domestic partners under the aegis of the California Public Employees' Retirement
System. The Modesto board thus joins about 138 governmental agencies in California that have
affirmatively accepted the state's invitation to make such benefits available to their employees.
_Modesto Bee_, Jan. 14. * * * In Long Beach, collective bargaining between the Long Beach
Unified School District and unions representing its employees has resulted in tentative
agreements that will include domestic partnership benefits. _Long Beach Press-Telegram_, Jan.
17.

_Colorado_ - A civil union bill was introduced in the Colorado legislature on January 13 by Rep.
Tom Plant, who said the measure was drafted to affect approximately 500 legal rights presently
enjoyed by married couples under state law. A spokesperson for the conservative anti-gay group
Focus on the Family said that the organization, which is based in Colorado Springs, would fight
the bill "tooth and nail." It is worth noting that although Colorado repealed its criminal laws on
consensual sodomy decades ago, the state does not bar sexual orientation discrimination.
_365Gay.com_, Jan. 14, 2003.

_Florida - Key West_ - The Key West, Florida, City Commission voted on Jan. 6 to add "gender
identity and expression" to the city's ordinance banning discrimination in employment, public
accommodations and housing. When approved by the mayor, the new law would make Key
West the first Florida municipality to extend protection against discrimination to transgendered
persons. _Miami Herald_, Dec. 30; _Washington Blade_, Jan. 17.

_Illinois - Springfield_ - The City Council in Springfield voted 8-1 on Jan. 7 in favor of an
ordinance banning sexual orientation discrimination in housing, employment and credit.
_Washington Blade_, Jan. 10.

_New Mexico - Law Cruces _ - On Jan. 6, the Las Cruces, New Mexico, City Council voted to
add "sexual orientation" to the city's discrimination complaint policy, which means that any city
employee who believes they have suffered discrimination on account of sexual orientation may
file a complaint with the city's Equal Employment Office. The ban on discrimination covers city
workers, applicants for city positions, and participants and beneficiaries of city services.
Reporting on the vote, the _Las Cruces Sun News_ (Jan. 9) noted that Dona Ana County and
New Mexico State University already had such provisions in their discrimination policies. A
local gay activist told the newspaper that the new governor, Bill Richardson, had committed to
expanding state non-discrimination policies to cover sexual orientation, and to making same-sex
partner benefits available to state employees, but Richardson has not made public announcements
along these lines yet.

_Virginia_ - Both racism and homophobia were blamed when the Virginia House and Senate
court committees voted to deny a second term in office to Newport News Circuit Judge Verbena
M. Askew, an African American woman who had been the subject of sexual harassment charges
by a female subordinate. The sexual harassment charge had been settled by a payment to the
plaintiff by the City of Hampton, Virginia. Republican leaders denied that Askew was being
subjected to critical scrutiny because of her race or sexual orientation, but nonetheless voted to
block her reappointment, claiming she had not adequately disclosed the facts about the case
during the committee review process. They also cited some complaints by lawyers about Judge
Askew's demeanor and work habits. During the hearings, Brenda Collins, Askew's accuser,
reportedly held the committee members spellbound with a tale of attempted seduction and
alleged retaliation when Collins refused to reciprocate Askew's attentions. Democrats on the
committee cried foul, arguing that the case against Askew was not proved and that bias was at
work in the vote against her. _Virginian-Pilot and Ledger-Star_, Norfolk, VA, Jan. 23. A.S.L.

Law & Society Notes

Collective bargaining negotiations at the Associated Press appear to have stalled over the issue of
domestic partnership benefits. The Newspaper Guild/CWA Local 31222, representing about
1700 US-based AP newsroom workers, has continued to bargain since the prior agreement
expired on Nov. 30, 2002, but said that management has firmly rejected its demand for domestic
partnership benefits, and has refused to provide any explanation. Ironically, many of the
newspapers that subscribe to AP and reprint its news dispatches and features offer DP benefits to
their own employees. _Editor and Publisher_, Jan. 21, 2003.

Judy Yudof, the president of the United Synagogues of America, the federation of synagogues
belonging to the Conservative Movement of American Judaism, requested that the movement's
Law Community once again take up the issue of same-sex unions and ordination of openly gay
people. According to an _Associated Press_ story that ran in many newspapers on January 4,
Yudof is not advocating a particular outcome on those questions (as to which the law committee
has ruled negatively in the past, most recently in 1992, with active dissents), but stated that
answers are needed on questions that haven't been addressed for several years. "I've just felt
there is some concern out there - in the lay world at least - about the status of homosexuals
within our movement," she said. "There are some people who feel uncomfortable about putting a
restriction upon someone who admits to being a homosexual." The United Synagogue consists of
approximately 800 congregations in North America.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) received a petition calling for an unprecedented national
denominational meeting to consider discipline against churches that are defying a ban on openly
gay ministers, but then several signers of the petition withdrew their signatures in reaction to
negative publicity. According to an Associated Press report, the special assembly called for by
the petition would have been the first ever held by the 214-year-old denomination. _Akron
Beacon Journal_, Jan. 28. A.S.L.

European Human Rights Court Takes Austria To Task Over Unequal Age of Consent

In decisions released in Strasbourg on January 9, a 7 member panel of the European Court of
Human Rights chided Austria for having delayed in repealing an unequal age of consent for gay
sex, and for having failed to provide redress for individuals who had been convicted under the
law in recent years. _L. and V. v. Austria_, _S.L. v. Austria_,
http://www.echr.coe.int/Eng/Press/2003/jan/L&VvAustriaandSLvAustriajudse.htm (press
release); http://www.echr.coe.int/hudoc.htm (Access HUDOC, Title = L., Respondent = Austria,
Search) (this will bring up both judgments).

The applicants in the first case, referred to in the court opinion as L. and V., were each convicted
of having had sex with teenage boys. In both cases, it would have been legal for them to have
had sex with girls of the same age, as the age of consent for heterosexual sex in Austria was 14
(while only boys who were 18 or older could consent to have sex with men). The applicant in the
second case, a 17-year-old boy referred to as S.L., complained that the unequal age of consent
laws had prevented him from establishing relationships with older men to whom he was
attracted, and thus improperly interfered with his private life.

Under the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms,
member nations of the European Union are committed to respect for private life and human
dignity, and are also bound by equality requirements. In recent years, the European Court has
made clear that discrimination on account of sexual orientation can be held to violate the equality
requirement. In 1995, the Austrian parliament was presented with a proposal to equalize the ages
of consent for heterosexual and homosexual sex, but the repeal was voted down amid a
moralistic legislative debate devaluing homosexual sex. By last summer, reacting to more recent
developments, the Austrian parliament had come its senses and realized it was out of step with
the rest of Europe, including most notably Great Britain, where after much struggle an
equalization was achieved by the Blair Government, so the ages of consent had been equalized.

But, amazingly, the courts and the government had refused petitions from men convicted under
the prior law to repeal their convictions and compensate them for the violation of their rights, so
an appeal to the European Court was instituted. The significance of the appeal, even though the
cases might have seemed moot due to the recent Austrian law reform, was to establish as a matter
of European-wide law that gay people may not be subjected to unequal rules on sexual
expression, a precedent that will be useful in future, especially as more countries from Eastern
Europe, some with histories of repressive laws against homosexuality, apply for full membership
in the Union.

The European court panel focused on two factors that undermined the government's argument
that the differential age of consent was necessary "to protect the sexual development of male
adolescents," which was the argument advanced by the Austrian government in this case. One
was "recent research according to which sexual orientation is usually established before puberty
in both boys and girls," and the other was that "the majority of member States of the Council of
Europe have recognised equal ages of consent." The court also noted that Austria only imposes
the higher age of consent on adolescent men, not adolescent women, introducing yet another
equality issue.

Wrote the European Court: "To the extent that Article 209 of the Criminal Code embodied a
predisposed bias on the part of a heterosexual majority against a homosexual minority, these
negative attitudes cannot of themselves be considered by the Court to amount to sufficient
justification for the differential treatment any more than similar negative attitudes towards those
of a different race, origin or colour." The court awarded monetary damages to all the applicants,
amount to 15,000 Euros to each of the convicted men and 5,000 Euros to the adolescent
applicant, as well as various amounts to defray their litigation costs.

In both cases, the attorney for the applicants was Helmut Graupner, a prominent gay rights
attorney practicing in Vienna. A.S.L.

Other International Notes

_European Union_ - The Parliament of Europe voted 277-269 (14 abstentions) in support of a
report calling upon the 15 member states to give domestic partners (both same-sex and opposite-sex) the same legal rights as married couples. The report does not call for opening up legal
marriage to same-sex partners, as an amendment to that effect was defeated. The vote is not
binding on member states. _Zenit.org_, Jan. 17.

_Australia/New Zealand_ - The New Zealand High Court has rejected the appeal of a gay male
sperm donor from Sydney, Australia, attempting to enforce an agreement he had with a lesbian
couple now living in Auckland, under which he would be entitled to maintain a relationship with
the child born from his sperm donation. The Family Court had ruled that the man's wish to have
access to the child was not contemplated by the Guardianship Act 1968, which provides that a
sperm donor has no legal rights to a child conceived through donor insemination. Two of the
High Court judges called for some legislative reconsideration of the issue, arguing that the statute
had been framed without reference to its possible impact in gay situations. In this case there had
been a detailed written agreement between the sperm donor and the lesbian couple, including
providing regular visitation for the donor, but the friendship "broke down" and the mothers
blocked further visitation. _New Zealand Herald_, Jan. 31, 2003.

_Canada_ - According to a report in the _Washington Blade_ on Jan. 17, Justice Allan Stewart
of the Vancouver Supreme Court has rejected a ruling by the British Columbia Human Rights
Tribunal, which had found that the North Vancouver School District discriminated against
student Azmi Jubran when it failed to stop schoolmates who had teased and taunted Jubran with
homophobic epithets. Jubran told the tribunal that he is not gay, but was routinely called
"faggot," "homo" and "gay." Jubran's classmates testified that they did not regard him as being
gay but were just taunting him. Justice Stewart found the tribunal decision was fatally flawed,
since Jubran's sexual orientation was not the basis of the harassment against him.

_Canada_ - The _National Post_ reported on Jan. 29 that Statistics Canada, the nation's census
agency, is taking a national survey to determine the number of Canadian adults who self-identify
as gay or lesbian. In preliminary tests, the agency determined that many people would not
answer a general census question about their sexual orientation, but would be forthcoming if they
were told that the information was needed for a specific purpose. In this case, the agency
believes that it needs this information to assist in the enforcement of laws against discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation (which are in place throughout Canada at both the state and
federal levels), and in connection with public health policy making. The question will be asked
in a national survey as part of the Canadian Community Health Study, which contacts 130,000
Canadians every two years to gather data.

_Egypt_ - The _New York Times_ (Jan. 14) reported that the crack-down against gay men in
Egypt is continuing, now using the internet. Law enforcement officials posing as gay men are
reportedly cruising on-line and then arresting the men who make dates with them.

_South Africa_ - An execution-style slaying of eight men and wounding of two others in a Cape
Town gay massage parlor led to a manhunt by police in South Africa, seeking four suspects. A
police spokesman said that most of the victims were found shot dead with their hands tied and
throats slit. Although prostitution is supposedly common in the neighborhood where this
business is located, police identified the premises as a massage parlor, not a brothel (as had been
reported in some news accounts. While some speculated that this was a hate crime, others
posited that it had to do with gang wars or drugs. _New Zealand Herald_, Jan. 22.

_Spain_ - Jose Maria Mendiluce, the Green Party's candidate for mayor of Madrid, recently
came out as gay in an interview with a gay-oriented magazine. Although indicating that he
thought this revelation may put an end to his political career, Mendiluce stated, "The gay
community can count on me to defend our rights together." If elected, Mendiluce would be the
third openly-gay mayor of a major European city, joining Bertrand Delanoe of Paris and Klaus
Wowereit of Berlin. _Washington Blade_, Jan. 10.

_United Kingdom_ - The _London Sunday Times_ (Jan. 5) reported that Sir Adrian Fulford, an
openly gay lawyer, has been appointed to the High Court, and is to be Britain's representative at
the International Criminal Court, which will try alleged war criminals for crimes against
humanity. A spokesman for the gay rights group OutRage, praising the appointment - the first
of an openly-gay lawyer to such a significant judicial office in Britain - stated: "It would be
reasonable to assume that other High Court judges are gay, but they would not want it advertised
because they fear it would hinder their chances of promotion." Fulford, who has been a
practicing lawyer since 1978, came out in an article in _Gay Times_ ten years ago, stating that he
did not want to be like other gay barristers who were forced to shun gay colleagues for fear of
guilt by association. A.S.L.

Professional Notes

_Mary Dunlap_, whose impassioned advocacy of gay rights and human rights made her a leader
of the lesbian and gay legal movement, died from cancer on Jan. 17. Dunlap was a co-founder of
Equal Rights Advocates, the San Francisco group that generated the National Center for Lesbian
Rights. She was most likely the first openly-lesbian attorney to argue a case before the United
States Supreme Court, representing the Gay Olympics organization in its ultimately unsuccessful
attempt to keep its name over the legal challenge of the U.S. Olympic Committee. _San
Francisco Arts & Athletics, Inc. v. United States Olympic Committee_, 483 U.S. 522 (1987). A
few years later, as keynote speaker at the annual Lesbian & Gay Law Association of Greater New
York dinner at Tavern-on-the-Green, Dunlap conducted a live auction of the formal wear that she
wore on the occasion of her Supreme Court argument, to benefit LeGaL's educational and
charitable activities. She taught lesbian and gay law courses at several law schools in the San
Francisco Bay area. In recent years, having retired from law practice, she had served since 1996
as director of San Francisco's Office of Citizen Complaints, the agency charged as a watchdog
over the police department, and was widely credited with taking a moribund, much-criticized
office and turning it around, also putting an end to a succession of short-termed, unsuccessful
directors. Her loss at age 54 leaves an extraordinary void in the heart of the movement. She is
survived by her partner of 18 years, Maureen Mason, and her sister Helen. _San Francisco
Chronicle_, Jan. 22.

_Eugene M. Harrington_, an openly-gay law professor at Thurgood Marshall School of Law of
Texas Southern University in Houston, died from AIDS at age 62 on Dec. 29. Harrington was an
activist gay rights leader for many years, having run unsuccessfully as an openly-gay candidate
for the Houston City Council and having been founder or co-founder of several gay rights and
AIDS organizations in Texas. He was the senior member of the TMSL faculty at the time of his
death, and had won teacher-of-the-year awards many times. A native of New York, Harrington
was a graduate of St. Johns University Law School and also earned an LL.M. degree from UC-Berkeley.

_Suzanne Goldberg_, assistant professor and Director of the Women's Rights Litigation Clinic at
Rutgers Law School in Newark is the winner of this year's scholarly paper contest sponsored by
the Association of American Law Schools. The peer-reviewed competition drew 56 entries and
was judged by a specially-constituted committee chaired by Dean Mary Kay Kane of the
University of California, Hastings, Law School. Goldberg, who formerly served as a staff
attorney at Lambda Legal Defense & Education Fund for nine years, presented her paper at a
special symposium at the AALS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., on January 4. Her paper,
titled "Equality Without Tiers," will be published later this year in the University of Miami Law
Review.

The Association of the Bar of the City of New York sent LeGaL member _Jay Weiser_ as its
spokesperson to urge the New York State Bar Association House of Delegates to approve a
resolution supporting same-sex marriage, or at least same-sex civil unions. Although the City
Bar Association had approved the recommendations, they proved quite controversial at the State
Bar, whose membership is described as "eclectic" and includes some members who have
threatened to resign if the Association does anything to encourage the conferral of family rights
on gay partners. On January 24 the House voted to postpone further discussion of the issue until
its fall meeting in November. _New York Law Journal_, Jan. 27.

One of the early founders of the modern gay rights movement, _Morris Kight_, died in Los
Angeles on Jan. 19 at age 83. Until last year, he had served for more than two decades as a
member of the Los Angeles County Human Rights Commission. Kight was credited as a key
organizer of the first lesbian and gay pride parade in Los Angeles in 1970, marking the first
anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion, and was a co-founder of the Gay and Lesbian
Community Service Center of Los Angeles, which established the pattern for major community
centers in other cities combining recreational and socializing space with offices for gay
community social service agencies. He was also a founder of L.A.'s Stonewall Democratic Club,
and also put together an extraordinary gay-themed art collection which he arranged to be donated
to the One Institute at the University of Southern California. Kight is survived by his partner of
25 years, Roy Zucheran, two daughters, two grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. _Los
Angeles Times_, Jan. 20.

Openly-lesbian California Superior Court Judge _Diana R. Hall_ is facing charges of six criminal
violations as a result of an alleged Dec. 21 altercation with her domestic partner followed by a
drunken driving arrest. If she is convicted or pleads guilty on any of the felony counts, Hall
would lose her judicial position. Her attorney announced that she would fight all by the drunk-driving charges, which are misdemeanors. _Washington Blade_, Jan. 24.

_David B. Cruz_, a professor at the University of Southern California Law School, is the first
Visiting Scholar at the The Williams Project of the University of California at Los Angeles Law
School. The Williams Project is an endowed center program at UCLA specifically focused on
issues of sexuality and law, which is under the director of Prof. William B. Rubenstein. Cruz is a
graduate of NYU Law School, and has been a member of the USC law faculty since 1996. * * *
The Williams Project is presenting a Sexual Orientation Law Update on Feb. 7, from 1 to 5:30
pm, at UCLA Law School. At the close of the program, participants will celebrate the opening of
the Williams Project Reading Room & Collection in the Darling Law Library Tower with a gala
reception. For information, inquire at: WilliamsProject@law.ucla.edu, or call 310-267-4382.
A.S.L.

AIDS & RELATED LEGAL NOTES

Forced Drug Holiday Did Not Violate HIV+ Prisoner's Rights

Two short-term interruptions in providing a prison inmate with his HIV medication is
insufficient to support the prisoner's claim that prison officials violated the Eighth Amendment's
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, according to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
2nd Circuit. . _Smith v. Carpenter_, 2003 WL 115223 (Jan.14, 2003).

Willie Smith was incarcerated at the Camp Pharsalia Correctional Facility in upstate New York.
Throughout his incarceration, Smith was provided with medical treatment for HIV including a
drug-therapy program consisting of Saquinavir, Combivir and Bactrim.

On two separate occasions, Smith's drug-therapy program was interrupted for short periods of
time. First, in October 1998, Smith ran out of medication and the prison failed to refill his
prescriptions for seven days. Second, in January 1999, Smith's HIV medications were
confiscated during a random search of his living quarters. The medications were replaced five
days later when Smith was transferred to a different facility.

Smith had been instructed that he should adhere strictly to his prescribed dosage regime and not
take any "drug holidays." He was concerned that the lapses in treatment could result in his HIV
infection becoming resistant to his prescribed drugs.

Defendants' medical expert, at Department of Correctional Services doctor, testified at trial that
missing HIV medication can be potentially harmful in some situations, possibly leading to viral
mutation and drug resistance. However, there was no conclusive evidence that the two short-term
interruptions had caused actual harm to Smith.

The jury was asked whether Smith proved by a preponderance of the evidence that he suffered
from a serious medical need and, if so, whether the prison's conduct amounted to deliberate
indifference to that need. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, finding that the
lapses in treatment were not serious. Smith moved for a new trial, arguing that his HIV+ status
alone demonstrated "serious medical need" for 8th Amendment purposes. Judge Norman A.
Mordue of the Northern District of New York disagreed, and held that the jury's verdict was
reasonable because Smith had failed to prove that the two short term interruptions in his drug-therapy program had placed his health in substantial jeopardy.

On appeal, Smith argued that he was not required to show "actual" harm, but only "potential"
harm from the interruption of his drug-therapy.

The Second Circuit noted that not every lapse in medical treatment will rise to the level of a
violation of the 8th Amendment. Further, society itself does not expect prisoners to have
unqualified access to medical care. In an opinion by Circuit Judge Chester Straub, the court
agreed with Smith that HIV is a serious medical condition requiring medical treatment. However,
the court noted that, except for the two short-term interruptions, Smith had received consistent
and regular medical treatment for his condition. Where regular medical treatment is provided for
a prisoner with a serious medical condition, the 2nd Circuit held that the "actual medical
consequences that flow form the alleged denial of care will be highly relevant to the question of
whether the denial of treatment subjected the prisoner to a significant risk of medical harm.<70>
Accordingly, the court affirmed Judge Mordue and held that the jury was entitled to weigh the
absence of adverse effects in evaluating the objective sufficiency of Smith's claim. _Todd V.
Lamb_

Federal Court Finds No 8th Amendment Violation in Death of HIV+ Prisoner

Maritza Ribera failed to persuade Judge Jay A. Garcia- Gregory of the U.S. District Court in
Puerto Rico that conditions contributing to the death of her son, Amaury Seise Pubill, while
incarcerated at Bayamon Correctional Complex, violated his 8th Amendment rights. _Rivera v.
Alvarado_, 2003 WL 141991 (Jan. 9, 2003). Pubill had been incarcerated since 1992 when he
was discovered to be suffering from hepatitis C during the summer of 1996. Several months
later, he also tested HIV+, and rapdily developed serious symptoms. Ribera alleged that her son
did not receive any follow-up or special treatment following either diagnosis. He reported sick
on November 30, 1996, at which time an attending physician diagnosed him as having AIDS and
being acutely sick. the next day, he was transferred to a regional hospital, arriving shortly after
midnight, at which time medical personnel administered medication and took x-rays, but he died
a day later. The court found, with respect to the two co-defendants whose motions to dismiss
were before it, that neither had been deliberately indifferent to Pubill's serious medical needs.
Once again, emphasis is placed on the high standard the Supreme Court has erected in 8th
Amendment claims arising from defective medical care for prisoners; it is not enough to show
that medical care was negligent, unless there is evidence that the individual charged defendants
knew of the serious condition and reacted to it with deliberate indifference. So long as any sort
of treatment is rendered, an 8th Amendment claim is likely to fail under current standards. A.S.L.

Bush Nominee for HIV Advisory Commission Withdraws Under Fire

President George W. Bush has been busy stacking his Presidential Advisory Commission on HIV
and AIDS with social conservatives, but one appointment went so far right that adverse political
and media comment led to a quick withdrawal. Jerry Thacker, a marketing consultant who had
publicly characterized AIDS as a "gay plague" and homosexuality as a "deathstyle" quickly
withdrew his name in response to adverse comment. _San Francisco Chronicle_, Jan. 24. * * *
Bush surprised AIDS activists by announcing a major new initiative to combat AIDS in Africa
and the Caribbean during his state of the union message on Jan. 28, but there was some
skepticism about the follow-up, since Bush has announced many fine-sounding initiatives, only
to have them sabotaged at the legislative or appropriations stage. Whether this one is substantive
or merely public relations is yet to be seen. Bush promised expenditures of $15 billion on
international AIDS efforts, $10 billion of which would be "new money," although subsequent
news reports indicated that this would come to only $700 million in the first year, far short of
what experts claim is needed to make a real dent in the problem in Africa. A few days after the
speech, the White House announced that Bush would be including in his proposed budget for the
next fiscal year a significant boost in spending for domestic AIDS efforts as well. Again, one
reserves judgment until details are forthcoming. A.S.L.

In its Jan. 30 issue, the _American Lawyer_ included a special feature article about Chicago-based Jenner & Block, described as an extraordinarily gay-friendly law firm. Among other
things, Jenner has a diversity committee that publishes a quarterly newsletter, with one of the
quarterly issues each year devoted to the firm's gay-related pro bono work and the activities and
interests of its openly lesbian and gay attorneys. Jenner is co-counsel with Lambda Legal
Defense in the pending U.S. Supreme Court Texas sodomy case. A former Jenner associate, Pat
Logue, heads Lambda's Chicago office.

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